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open access

Fearful Faces do Not Lead to Faster Attentional Deployment in Individuals with Elevated Psychopathic Traits

Description: This article discusses a gaze-cueing experiment in which the predictivity of a gaze-cue was manipulated to assess the degree to which individuals with elevated psychopathic traits can use contextual information.
Date: June 30, 2017
Creator: Hoppenbrouwers, Sylvo S.; Munneke, Jaap; Kooiman, Karen A.; Little, Bethany; Neumann, Craig S. & Theeuwes, Jan
Partner: UNT College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences
open access

Sodium chloride accumulation in glycophyte plants with cyanobacterial symbionts

Description: This article reports an apparently novel and taxonomically diverse grouping of plants that continuously maintain high tissue sodium contents and share the rare feature of possessing symbiotic cyanobacteria.
Date: October 11, 2017
Creator: Green, T. G. Allan; Sancho, Leopoldo G.; Pintado, Ana; Saco, Dolores; Martín, Soledad; Arróniz-Crespo, María et al.
Partner: UNT College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences
open access

Two types of the 3rd person feature in English?!

Description: This article investigates the morphosyntactic properties of the person feature in the English imposter construction studied by Collins & Postal.
Date: July 12, 2017
Creator: Furuya, Kaori
Partner: UNT College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences
open access

Relation between lifespan polytrauma typologies and post-trauma mental health

Description: This article considers the count and types of traumas (polytraumatization) in relation to post-trauma mental health by conducting a study on the relation of polytraumatization patterns to PTSD clusters, depression, and impulsivity facets. Results indicate that individuals exposed to multiple PTE (potentially traumatizing event) types, particularly interpersonal traumas, may be at risk for more severe post-trauma symptoms.
Date: October 16, 2017
Creator: Contractor, Ateka A.
Partner: UNT College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences
open access

The impact agenda and the search for a good life

Description: This article is published as part of a collection on the future of research assessment. It explores the philosophies of Plato and Aristotle concerning the impact agenda and how philosophy can assist policy questions. Together, their work suggests that policy-sensitive philosophers can help decision makers be more self-conscious about the assumptions underlying their work.
Date: February 14, 2017
Creator: Frodeman, Robert
Partner: UNT College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences
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